SAHG, a Comprehensive Database of Predicted Structures of All Human
Published online 3 November 2010 Nucleic Acids Research, 2011, Vol. 39, Database issue D487–D493 doi:10.1093/nar/gkq1057 SAHG, a comprehensive database of predicted structures of all human proteins Chie Motono1,2,*, Junichi Nakata1,2, Ryotaro Koike2,3, Kana Shimizu1,2, Matsuyuki Shirota2,4, Takayuki Amemiya2,5, Kentaro Tomii1,2, Nozomi Nagano1,2, Naofumi Sakaya1,2,6, Kiyotaka Misoo1,2,6, Miwa Sato1,2,5,7, Akinori Kidera2,5,8, Hidekazu Hiroaki2,9, Tsuyoshi Shirai2,10, Kengo Kinoshita2,4, Tamotsu Noguchi1,2 and Motonori Ota2,3,* 1Computational Biology Research Center (CBRC), National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tokyo 135-0064, 2Institute for Bioinformatics Research and Development (BIRD), Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), Tokyo 102-0081, 3Graduate School of Information Science, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, 4Graduate School of Information Science, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8579, 5Department of Supramolecular Biology, Yokohama City University, Yokohama 230-0045, 6Information and Mathematical Science Laboratory Inc., Tokyo 112-0012, 7Mitsui Knowledge Industry Co., Ltd, Tokyo 105-6215, 8Department of Computational Science Research Program, RIKEN, Wako 351-0198, 9Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe University, Kobe 650-0017 and 10Department of Bioscience, Nagahama Institute of Bioscience and Technology, Nagahama 526-0829, Japan Received August 15, 2010; Revised October 2, 2010; Accepted October 13, 2010 ABSTRACT Most proteins from higher organisms are known to animated images. As of July 2010, SAHG contains be multi-domain proteins and contain substantial 42 581 protein-domain models in approximately numbers of intrinsically disordered (ID) regions. To 24 900 unique human protein sequences from the analyse such protein sequences, those from human RefSeq database.
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